Defendant-appellant, Victor Verola, appeals an order of the district court reversing the bankruptcy court’s decision that the restitution obligation arising from his Florida conviction for fraudulent transactions was dischargeable under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code (“Code”). This appeal requires us to consider whether the Supreme Court’s decision in Kelly v. Robinson 1 is still valid following both the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994 and the Supreme Court’s decision in Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare v. Davenport. 2 Because we find that it is and that the district court did not err in failing to *1207 follow the analysis employed by the Seventh and Third circuits in determining whether restitution is being paid “to and for the benefit of a government unit” for the purposes of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(7), we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
The facts underlying this appeal are not in dispute. In November 2001, the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit Court, Saint Lucie County, Florida, adjudged Verola guilty of fraudulent transactions made between 1994 and 1998, in violation of Fla. Stat. § 517.301(l)(a) (2001). R1-7, Exh. 3 at 1. He was sentenced to thirty-four months in prison. On 6 December 2001, he stipulated to and was ordered to pay $2,538,557.05 in restitution as a condition of ten years probation. Id., Exh. 2 at 1. According to the restitution order, Verola was to pay the total amount of restitution “through the Department of Corrections, with an additional 4% fee for handling, processing, and forwarding said restitution to the victims(s).” Id.
Verola had previously filed for bankruptcy in March 2000 and, in October 2002, he sought a determination of the dis-chargeability of his restitution obligation under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(7). The bankruptcy court granted summary judgment in favor of Verola and found the restitution obligation dischargeable. The court explained that, because the restitution order made it clear that the money, although it was to be collected by the Department of Corrections, was then to be forwarded to the victims, the second requirement for excepting a debt from discharge — that the debt be “payable to and for the benefit of a governmental unit” — was left unsatisfied. See § 523(a)(7). The district court reversed and concluded that the Supreme Court’s opinion in Kelly made clear that all state-imposed criminal restitution obligations meet the requirements prescribed by § 523(a)(7) and, thus, are not dis-chargeable.
On appeal, Verola argues that the district court erred in finding the restitution obligation nondischargeable. In so arguing, he asserts that (1) the Supreme Court’s decision in Davenport “abrogated” its decision in Kelly; (2) the 1994 amendments to the Bankruptcy Code effectively preempted the Supreme Court’s ruling in Kelly; and (3) the district court erred in failing to follow the test set out by the Seventh and Third Circuits for determining whether restitution is “payable to and for the benefit of a government unit” for the purposes of § 523(a)(7).
II. DISCUSSION
“We review legal conclusions by either the bankruptcy court or the district court
de novo.” In re the New Power Co.,
Verola’s restitution obligation is exactly that. Verola nevertheless argues that his *1208 restitution obligation should be discharged because (1) Kelly is no longer binding precedent and (2) his restitution obligation does not meet the second requirement that the restitution be payable “to and for the benefit of a government unit,” even under Kelly.
A. Kelly
1. Effect of Davenport
Verola asserts that the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Davenport
essentially abrogated its ruling in
Kelly.
In
Davenport,
the Court addressed an attempt by a Chapter 13 debtor to have a state-court-imposed criminal restitution order discharged.
Accordingly, we find that the opinion in Davenport, particularly in light of the fact that Congress soon thereafter amended the Bankruptcy Code to overrule the decision by specifically making criminal restitution obligations non-dischargeable under Chapter 13 as well, 4 had no effect relevant to this case on the Court’s holding in Kelly.
2. Effect of 1994 Amendments
Verola also asserts that Congress’s 1994 addition to the Code of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(13), which exempts from discharge restitution obligations imposed under title 18 of the United States Code, effectively changed the meaning of § 523(a)(7) because Congress did not take the opportunity explicitly to add an exemption for state-imposed restitution obligations ' under Chapter 7. He makes a similar argument with respect to Congress’s earlier addition of 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a)(3).
5
As has been observed by
*1209
the Seventh Circuit, “[i]f Congress wants to supercede the Supreme Court’s decisions, it must amend the statute the Court has construed; continuity of text equals continuity of meaning.”
In re Towers,
B. “Payable” Test
Finally, Verola challenges the district court’s refusal to follow the analysis employed by the Seventh and Third Circuits regarding the second prong of § 523(a)(7). The courts in both cases pointed out that
Kelly
involved a restitution order under which a “governmental unit kept the restitution,” because “the state was itself the victim.”
Towers,
We do not find this approach to be applicable to Verola’s restitution order. First, both circuit cases may be easily distinguished from this case.
Towers
concerns the dischargeability of a state civil restitution order.
Towers,
III. CONCLUSION
Verola appeals the district court’s reversal of the bankruptcy court’s decision that his state-court-imposed criminal restitution obligation was dischargeable in his Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceedings. Because the Supreme Court’s holding in Kelly, that § 523(a)(7) makes all state-imposed criminal restitution obligations non-dischargea- *1210 ble, is still the law of the land, we AFFIRM.
Notes
.
.
. The Court in
Kelly
admitted "havfing] serious doubts whether Congress intended to make criminal penalties 'debts' within the meaning of § 101(4)” of the Bankruptcy Code, but concluded that it "need not address that question” because its holding was based upon § 523(a)(7).
Kelly,
. Title 11 U.S.C. § 1328(a)(3), which made state-court-imposed criminal restitution orders dischargeable under Chapter 13, was added to the Code in reaction to the
Davenport
decision by way of the Criminal Victims Protection Act of 1990.
See In re Clark,
. We note Verola’s argument in apparent reliance upon the doctrine of expressio unius est exclusio alterius might have had more force had all three provisions been drafted at once, as opposed to the provisions specifically protecting federal restitution orders and criminal restitution orders under Chapter 13 having been drafted after the Court’s ruling in Kelly had already explicitly extended the protection *1209 of § 523(a)(7) to state criminal restitution obligations under Chapter 7.
. The Third Circuit itself recognized this tension.
See In re Thompson,
